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i C. LOSES; GAME GOES EXTRA PERIOD
Southern
California
Trojan
WANTS COACHING JOB
HONOLULU, Feb. 7.—Application has been made by Otto Klum, football coach at the University of Hawaii, for the head coaching job at Washington State College, to succeed A. A. Exen-dine, who has resigned. Exendine will be remembered for the win his team scored over S. C. last fall.
VOL. XVII
Los Angeles, California, Monday, February 8, 1926
HAT the action of the ex ecutive committee in the mat-r of selecting an editor for the vhite-washed Wampus, was >t approved by the staff of the iblication was shown when the aff, acting as a unit, submitted formal resignation from the
tgazine to the new editor and o to Don Cameron, president : the committee.
The reasons given for the res-friation were, according to the
fsignation, that:
Number 83
a f
We feel that the new editor, hester Mackie, should be given free hand in the choice of his ff.
“The administration has publicly stated that it desires a thorough reorganization of the staff.
“The recent attack on the Wafpus has been unfair and unjust to Glady Setzler, Ralph Holly, John Post and Maude Miller.”
CARDS WIN FINAL TILT HERE30-22
Score at end of game 20-20; Final Period necessary to decide winner.
KENNY BOYER STARS
Les Turner’s Trojans play best Game of season against Stanford Reds Saturday night.
By VIRGIL PINKLEY
With the balance of victory or ! defeat resting on his shoulders, j Captain Kenny Boyer. all-Ameri-! can player, dropped a foul shot j through the basket to the score I 20-20 against the invading horde from Stanford only to loose the game during the extra five minutes of play by a 30-22 score in the last of a two-game series played ] Saturday night at the Olympic Auditorium before 5000 sport
crazed basketball fans.
GREAT GAME
The game was a heart-breaker for j the Trojans and one that the Stanford j Cardinals can feel proud in winning ; since the score was tied six times during the contest. At the end of the first j half the score stood 11-11 through the j dger, Bryant Hale, Joseph Du- spirited finish made by the S. C. men. J 7t*nv and Edwin Talmadge.
4ft I play, numerous touts were
Another reason voiced by several smbers of the staff was that they j not wish to work under a man osen as their leader from outside ;ir ranks and preferred working un-r a member of their own staff.
• * *
7 he names appearing on the rcs-|nation were those of the perma-'nt members of the Ii ampus staff.
Eiey are, Milton Booth, Mynette tch. Tom Aquillar, Don Mike, ilton Narwits, Rita Padway, Z. H olp<\ Ralph Huston. rjone Hull, Dave Fred, Scott C.
Wampus Staff Gives Reasons For Present Resignation
We, the undersigned, hereby resign as members of the staff of the University of Southern California WAMPUS for the following reasons:
(1) We feel that the new editor, Mr. Chester Mackie, should be given a free hand in the choice of his staff.
(2) The administration has publicly stated that it desires a thorough reorganization of the staff.
(3) The recent attack on the WAMPUS has been unfair and unjust to Grady Setzler, Ralph Holly, Maud Miller and John Post. (Signed) Milton H. Booth, Mynette
Ritch, Don Mike, Tom Aguilar, Milton G. Narwitz, Rita Padway, Leon Z. Wolpe, Ralph Huston, Marjorie L. Hull, Dave Fred, Scott C. Creager, Bryant Hale, Joseph Ducho'vny, Edwin Talmadge.
LAW SCHOOL HAS FORMAL DEDICATION
Many Distinguished Guests Participate in Morning Services at Bovard.
GREEK DANCE ATTENDED BY BIG CROWD
Dedication services for the new .Law School of the University of Southern California were held Friday morning on the Trojan campus. The opening of this School of Judiciary learning marks a new epic of progress in education in Southern California. Delegates and guests of nearly every state in the Union were present at yester-uay’s ceremonies.
The first event, the academic procession, was led by Hal Robert’s Trojan band, with the faculty and Seniors of the Uw School following. The line of march extended from the new Law Building down University Avenue to Bavord Auditorium, the scene of the morning program.
Dr. Rufus B. von KieinSmid, president of the university, presided over the program, with John Frederick Fisher, dean of the School of Religion, opening the day’s ceremonies with the usual invocation.
An address was delivered by Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assistant attorney general of the United States and an alumnus of the University of South-
Ex-Committee Did Want To Hold “Info” On Wampus
An error appeared in the “Wampus Story” in Friday’s issue of the Daily Trojan, and it is the wish of the Daily to clear up the question left in the minds of some students.
The error was made in regard to the motion made in the executive committee meeting that all information on the committee meeting be withheld from publication in the Daily Trojan. It was stated by error that the motion was lost.
The motion wa? not lost and the executive motion went on record as wanting to withhold the information.
Barton Hutchips, Burdette Ives, Mike Elwood and Lee Conti were the four who took the stand that the student body had a right to know what was going on in the committee meetings. Therefore the Trojan wishes to correct the error and to say that the motion was not lost, thus specifying that the information be withheld from publication.
OLD STAFF OF WAMPUS ■WALKS OUT
Members Hold Indignation Meeting to Protest Action of Executive Committee.
GIVE REASONS FOR MOVE
New Editor, Chet Mackie, Placed in Difficult Position by Recent Event.
During the first twenty minutes of Favors, Buffet Supper, and Lov-, era California, who stressed the fol-p y, numerous fouls were mad<J > ing Cup All Drawing Cards at lowing points in order that one may
both teams on account of the fast and aggressive playing.
TIED AT HALF With eighteen minutes of play gone in the opening half. Gene Dorsey arched a pretty 15 foot shot to tie the score 10-10. Stanford came back with a punch and slipped a point ahead through a foul shot made by New-house, Cardinal guard. This basket was followed a minute later by a foul shot scored by MacHaffie, which ended the scoring for the first half.
Opening the second period with a strong attack, the Cardinal and Gold players battled Stanford to a standstill during the second half and finished the game with a 20-20 score.
BOYER STARS Playing in a super-all-American style, Kenny Boyer, was the most outstanding player on the court. Boyer was here, there, everywhere, cutting his (Continued on Page 3)
.UR attention was called to the fact that although the executive oom-Ltee had passed a resolution to with-|d information on the meeting that Trojan published the account in ail, and stated that the motion was L. This latter statement was an cr, and the executive committee did :e in favor of this resolution.’ The for in the paper read. “Upon a bal-the motion was lost.” It should |/e read “The protest was lost.”
* • •
fHE PROTEST WAS VOICED BY lRTON HUTCHINS AND THE F?ITER, AND BACKED BV MIKE ►WOOD AND BURDETTE IVES ON IE GROUNDS THAT THE TRUTHS [ EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEET-GS SHOULD NOT BE SUP-! ESSED FROM PUBLICATION.
|E HAVE BEEN CRITICISED SE-RELY FOR HAVING IGNORED HE MOTION AS PASSED BY THE (MMITTEE, BUT FEEL THAT IN I DING SO WE HAVE ONLY EN-•AVORED TO CARRY OUT OUR ► LICY OF “SHOOTING SQUARE”
ITH THE ASSOCIATED STU-j •NTS.
♦ ♦ ♦
OME excellent results were ob- j The Bachelor Club, trial and joy of tained from the Southern Califor- Southern California co-eds, the ul-rooters at the Stanford basketball tra-smart group of handsome but icy-es Thursday and Saturday. Bur- hearted campus men, has been recog-te Henney, yell king, accomplished nized by the executive committee as a
Interfraternity.
Executive Committee Recognizes Bachelor Existence
at at first appeared to be about im->ible, that is, conducting a rooting tion in the auditorium The gen-| lay-out of the athletic palace does allow for very much of a facility yelling. Henney overcame the dicap and gave an exhibition of pied yelling. Hal Roberts and his jan band aided in putting the root-section “over.”
• * •
Yell kin-g Henney, who is work-is unable to attend the games til after they are started, but he much in evidence when he ar-ves. Like in footbal, Southern lifornia can establish itself in hearts of the sporting fans as ean sports by the yelling.
* • «*
eferees who call them entirely too e tend to cause considerable “boo-from the gallery, but it was in-
regular student organization.
No more will the bachelors grope around wondering whether they are a student organization, or merely an organization of students. No more will the self-styled women-haters be refused publicity in the TROJAN. No more will the “sour grapes” chorus wail of the bachelors’ nonexistence.
In Los Angeles social register the members of the Los Angeles Bachelors’ Club rate as the upper strata 'of the four hundred: On the campus, our own Bachelors’ Club has a similar rating. The twenty-two members are all Seniors. They are selected by the graduating members of the club each year. Every member gets to nominate his successor. These memberships are as greatly valued as memberships in any other campus organization.
The next big event on the Bachelors" program is the treasure hunt sched-sting to note that this did not * uled for Friday. The groups will leave
Scores of cars filled with happy Greeks sped their way over the pavement of Glendale and Burbank to the
Sunset Canyon Country Club last Friday evening to the annual Interfraternity Cpuncil Formal.
As keen as had been the competition for one of the ten tickets that were allowed to each house, more so was the competition for the prize of the dancing contest—a beautiful silver loving cup. The innovation of the evening was the buffet supper, which at 11:30 succeeded in winning the couples away from the strains of Patrick and Marsh’s twelve-piece orchestra.
The first indication of an unusual dance came as the cars rolled into the yard of the club. The Sunset Canyon Country Club is one of the newest and most enticingly appointed clubs in the South. Its location is such that it provides an ideal place to hold a formal dance such as that of the Interfraternity Council’s. Upon entering the club one received the usual dance program encased in an unusual way. The covers were light tan leather card cases with the university seal on them. On the front page were the crests of all eighteen of the member fraternities of the council. The dancing contest at 10:30 was one of the keenest competition.
Chaperones for the dance were: Dean and Mrs. Karl T. Waugh, Dean and Mrs. Wrallace Cunningham, Mr. and Mrs. Willis S. Hunter and Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Stonier
be a successful leader in the legal profession: (1) Legal habit of thought; (2) wua^-point of viaw, and (3> wall-placed responsibility of judgment. Mrs. Willebrandt is the only woman in the United States who has attained the position of assistant attorney general.
Charles Wesley Burns, resident bishop San Francisco Area Methodist Episcopal Church and a distinguished alumnus of S. C., congratulated the University of Southern California on behalf of the City of San Francisco and praised the good work that the Trojan school has been doing for the past decade in the legal profession.
Honorary Degrees of Doctor of Law were conferred upon the following: Dean Kirkland, Jesse William Curtis, alumni of S. C. Dr. James Brown Scott was given the Degree of Doctor of Civil Law. The degree of Doctor of Law was also conferred on Mrs. Willebrandt. The assembly was closed with the singing of the alma mater.
CLUB SINGS FORWAMP
Men s Glee Club Fills Three Important Engagements in One Week.
FELLOWSHIPS ARE OFFERED
Student Exchange Offers One Year of German Study to American Students.
ie from the Trojan rooting section, rather from the general admis-seats.
sxt week the Golden Bears will ere for one game, so let’s give the fornians the same sportsmanlike tment that was extended to the dinal varsity during the past ser-It Is the sd rit of the fight and competition that counts in the long and not the heavy end of the e.
Red and Hank’s Super Service Station at 7 in the evening. They will be given written directions. The first group to arrive at the treasure tis declared winner. The bachelors think that they will have a pretty good crowd at tbe treasure by 10 o’clock. Festivities wilj start at this time.
And now they are recognized. Ah! If the bachelors’ aren’t kiddiing us, here is a campus organization worth writing home about.
Appearing as one of the principal features on the Wampas program, the Southern California Glee Club presented a number of selections to the vast audience. Nearly 4000 people were assembled to witness this , latest affair of moviedom and mingled in the audience were many of tbe brightest stars of the silver screen.
According to Horace Judson, manager of the organization, the appearance of the club at this affair marks one of the high points of the 1926 season.
Friday night the Glee Club presented a program at the Biltmore Hotel at the dedication banquet of the Law One year of study in a German uni- | Building. Twenty-five men were used versity, with the privilege of earning | and four tables were reserved for the units good in an American college, is singers. Six numbers in all were sung, offered by the American German Stu- these songs being divided into groups dent Exchange to American students wjth two in each group. The program who are qualified for the work. A lim-1 began at 7 and lasted until 9:30 ited number of students wjth the nec- | o’clock.
essary credentials w'll be granted fel- j Saturday night the annual banquet lowships for the year 1926-27. Appli- ; Df the organization was held at the cations must be made before Febru- Maryland Hotel in Pasadena. Music ary 16.
was furnished by the Maryland concert The exchange is a branch of the In- j orchestra and various forms of enter-stitute of International Education, tainment were used during the affair, which has as its purpose the promo- ; The Glee Club presented a program tion of international good will by a between 9 and 9:45 before one of the mutual study of the institutions and most exclusive audiences it has psychology of different countries ; ever been privileged to entertain, ac-(Contlnued on page four) - c0rding to Judson.
LAW BUILDING DEDICATED BY NOTED GUESTS
Impressive Ceremonies Mark Formal Opening of New Law Building.
Dignified and impressive were the ceremonies of the dedication of the new Law School Building, which took place in the auditorium of the edifice last Friday afternoon. Under the chairmanship of Hon. Albert J. Wallace, president of the University Board of Trustees, the entire program was conducted.
Frank Monroe Porter, Dean of the University Law School, gave an address entitled “The History of the University Law School,” in which he traced the story of its growth from the time when it was a mere group of students interested in the studying of law to the time when this small body was absorbed by what has come to be known as the Southern California I>aw College.
The second address of the dedication ceremonies was given by Hon. John G. Mott, the president of the Los Angeles Bar Association, and was a speech dealing with the “Profession.”
“The Judiciary” was the theme of a speech delivered by Judge Jesse W. Curtis, an associate justice of the Su^ preme Court of California.
The dedicatory address was ably presented by the Hon. James Brown Scott, the secretary of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The ceremonies of dedication came as an aftermath to the academic pro-(Continued on Page Four)
Acting as a unit the majority of the staff of the Wampus resigned Friday. The action of the executive committee in ignoring the wishes of the staff and selecting an outsider as editor was the reason given by the staff for its action. This follows a fortnight of attacks on the W ampus coming from the country press, faculty committees, and finally the student executives.
Further reasons given for the action were: (1) To allow the new editor to pick his own staff, (2) aid the administration in their published de* mands tor a new staff and (3) as a protest against the removal of Grady Setzler and his associate editors.
When the announcement appeared in the Trojan that the executive committee had gone outside of the publication staff to select an editor, feeling among the staff members ran high. Hurried conferences were held, a written resignation was prepared and the staff members signed without dissent.
“Wre felt that this final slap in the face, coming from the students them' selves, was a little too much to take. Some staff members could not be located. But with three or four exceptions, the staff of the Wampus has resigned,” stated one of the ex-members of the staff.
The resignation of the staff was handed to Chet Mackie, as the new editor, and to Don Cameron, as chairman of the executive committee. This is reported to leave Mackie in a rather difficult situation. The hostility of the faculty, tbe outside criticism and aow the action of the staff resigning have, according to campus rumor, made the
Continued on Page Four)
“JAZZ” PLAY FOR JUNIORS
“Goose Hangs High,” Dealing With Youth, Now Being Released by Mrs. Teschke.
Do the young people of today have any serious thoughts in their heads, or are they concerned only with fhe!r efforts to kill Old Man Time?
John Atwill, manager of ‘ The Goo.-r Hangs High,” seventeenth annual Jun ior play, reports that the answer to this momentous question will be un folded in Bovard Auditorium Friday, the twenty-sixth of this month.
Mrs. Sal’y Teschke, the director, ports that she is highly pleas* d with the histrionic talent shown by the cast. She feels that this is the best cast, part for part, yet assembled on the campus.
In the rehearsals of the first act the work of Eugenia McQuartera, who (Continued on Page Four)
Dormitory Installs Demerit System;
Rules and More Rules
There are rules and rules; but the Dormitory girls have a corner on the market.
The latest invention of said institu tion is the “Merit System,” whose main merit is to guarantee that every girl will be inside the portals by 10:30 | every Friday and Saturday night.
Due to a slight misinterpretation of Robert’s historic rules, under which ! the student council attempted to in-| stall the new rules without constitu i tional authority, there has been a mix i up in the acceptance of the system. However, it seems a certainty that the ; Merit System will soon be one clause ! in the increasingly complicated sys I tem of rule at the W’omen’s Residence Hall.
The main points of the latest “sys tem of torture” include: five demerits for lights on after 11 o’clock, five for staying out ten minutes too late, five for being outside of room in study hours and five for unnecessary noise anytime, anyplace, anywhere. Twenty demerits in one week will concel the young lady’s dates for the following week-end.
One great merit of this system lies in the fact that after the first twenty demerits, one can break as many rules os she wishes without additional pun ishment. It has been suggested thar each girl choose one week in which to get everything out of her system, and then settle down to a dignified, law-abiding life.
The officials hope in installing this system to start a precedent that will be followed by similar rules bein? voted for the sorority houses.

i C. LOSES; GAME GOES EXTRA PERIOD
Southern
California
Trojan
WANTS COACHING JOB
HONOLULU, Feb. 7.—Application has been made by Otto Klum, football coach at the University of Hawaii, for the head coaching job at Washington State College, to succeed A. A. Exen-dine, who has resigned. Exendine will be remembered for the win his team scored over S. C. last fall.
VOL. XVII
Los Angeles, California, Monday, February 8, 1926
HAT the action of the ex ecutive committee in the mat-r of selecting an editor for the vhite-washed Wampus, was >t approved by the staff of the iblication was shown when the aff, acting as a unit, submitted formal resignation from the
tgazine to the new editor and o to Don Cameron, president : the committee.
The reasons given for the res-friation were, according to the
fsignation, that:
Number 83
a f
We feel that the new editor, hester Mackie, should be given free hand in the choice of his ff.
“The administration has publicly stated that it desires a thorough reorganization of the staff.
“The recent attack on the Wafpus has been unfair and unjust to Glady Setzler, Ralph Holly, John Post and Maude Miller.”
CARDS WIN FINAL TILT HERE30-22
Score at end of game 20-20; Final Period necessary to decide winner.
KENNY BOYER STARS
Les Turner’s Trojans play best Game of season against Stanford Reds Saturday night.
By VIRGIL PINKLEY
With the balance of victory or ! defeat resting on his shoulders, j Captain Kenny Boyer. all-Ameri-! can player, dropped a foul shot j through the basket to the score I 20-20 against the invading horde from Stanford only to loose the game during the extra five minutes of play by a 30-22 score in the last of a two-game series played ] Saturday night at the Olympic Auditorium before 5000 sport
crazed basketball fans.
GREAT GAME
The game was a heart-breaker for j the Trojans and one that the Stanford j Cardinals can feel proud in winning ; since the score was tied six times during the contest. At the end of the first j half the score stood 11-11 through the j dger, Bryant Hale, Joseph Du- spirited finish made by the S. C. men. J 7t*nv and Edwin Talmadge.
4ft I play, numerous touts were
Another reason voiced by several smbers of the staff was that they j not wish to work under a man osen as their leader from outside ;ir ranks and preferred working un-r a member of their own staff.
• * *
7 he names appearing on the rcs-|nation were those of the perma-'nt members of the Ii ampus staff.
Eiey are, Milton Booth, Mynette tch. Tom Aquillar, Don Mike, ilton Narwits, Rita Padway, Z. H olp ing Cup All Drawing Cards at lowing points in order that one may
both teams on account of the fast and aggressive playing.
TIED AT HALF With eighteen minutes of play gone in the opening half. Gene Dorsey arched a pretty 15 foot shot to tie the score 10-10. Stanford came back with a punch and slipped a point ahead through a foul shot made by New-house, Cardinal guard. This basket was followed a minute later by a foul shot scored by MacHaffie, which ended the scoring for the first half.
Opening the second period with a strong attack, the Cardinal and Gold players battled Stanford to a standstill during the second half and finished the game with a 20-20 score.
BOYER STARS Playing in a super-all-American style, Kenny Boyer, was the most outstanding player on the court. Boyer was here, there, everywhere, cutting his (Continued on Page 3)
.UR attention was called to the fact that although the executive oom-Ltee had passed a resolution to with-|d information on the meeting that Trojan published the account in ail, and stated that the motion was L. This latter statement was an cr, and the executive committee did :e in favor of this resolution.’ The for in the paper read. “Upon a bal-the motion was lost.” It should |/e read “The protest was lost.”
* • •
fHE PROTEST WAS VOICED BY lRTON HUTCHINS AND THE F?ITER, AND BACKED BV MIKE ►WOOD AND BURDETTE IVES ON IE GROUNDS THAT THE TRUTHS [ EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEET-GS SHOULD NOT BE SUP-! ESSED FROM PUBLICATION.
|E HAVE BEEN CRITICISED SE-RELY FOR HAVING IGNORED HE MOTION AS PASSED BY THE (MMITTEE, BUT FEEL THAT IN I DING SO WE HAVE ONLY EN-•AVORED TO CARRY OUT OUR ► LICY OF “SHOOTING SQUARE”
ITH THE ASSOCIATED STU-j •NTS.
♦ ♦ ♦
OME excellent results were ob- j The Bachelor Club, trial and joy of tained from the Southern Califor- Southern California co-eds, the ul-rooters at the Stanford basketball tra-smart group of handsome but icy-es Thursday and Saturday. Bur- hearted campus men, has been recog-te Henney, yell king, accomplished nized by the executive committee as a
Interfraternity.
Executive Committee Recognizes Bachelor Existence
at at first appeared to be about im->ible, that is, conducting a rooting tion in the auditorium The gen-| lay-out of the athletic palace does allow for very much of a facility yelling. Henney overcame the dicap and gave an exhibition of pied yelling. Hal Roberts and his jan band aided in putting the root-section “over.”
• * •
Yell kin-g Henney, who is work-is unable to attend the games til after they are started, but he much in evidence when he ar-ves. Like in footbal, Southern lifornia can establish itself in hearts of the sporting fans as ean sports by the yelling.
* • «*
eferees who call them entirely too e tend to cause considerable “boo-from the gallery, but it was in-
regular student organization.
No more will the bachelors grope around wondering whether they are a student organization, or merely an organization of students. No more will the self-styled women-haters be refused publicity in the TROJAN. No more will the “sour grapes” chorus wail of the bachelors’ nonexistence.
In Los Angeles social register the members of the Los Angeles Bachelors’ Club rate as the upper strata 'of the four hundred: On the campus, our own Bachelors’ Club has a similar rating. The twenty-two members are all Seniors. They are selected by the graduating members of the club each year. Every member gets to nominate his successor. These memberships are as greatly valued as memberships in any other campus organization.
The next big event on the Bachelors" program is the treasure hunt sched-sting to note that this did not * uled for Friday. The groups will leave
Scores of cars filled with happy Greeks sped their way over the pavement of Glendale and Burbank to the
Sunset Canyon Country Club last Friday evening to the annual Interfraternity Cpuncil Formal.
As keen as had been the competition for one of the ten tickets that were allowed to each house, more so was the competition for the prize of the dancing contest—a beautiful silver loving cup. The innovation of the evening was the buffet supper, which at 11:30 succeeded in winning the couples away from the strains of Patrick and Marsh’s twelve-piece orchestra.
The first indication of an unusual dance came as the cars rolled into the yard of the club. The Sunset Canyon Country Club is one of the newest and most enticingly appointed clubs in the South. Its location is such that it provides an ideal place to hold a formal dance such as that of the Interfraternity Council’s. Upon entering the club one received the usual dance program encased in an unusual way. The covers were light tan leather card cases with the university seal on them. On the front page were the crests of all eighteen of the member fraternities of the council. The dancing contest at 10:30 was one of the keenest competition.
Chaperones for the dance were: Dean and Mrs. Karl T. Waugh, Dean and Mrs. Wrallace Cunningham, Mr. and Mrs. Willis S. Hunter and Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Stonier
be a successful leader in the legal profession: (1) Legal habit of thought; (2) wua^-point of viaw, and (3> wall-placed responsibility of judgment. Mrs. Willebrandt is the only woman in the United States who has attained the position of assistant attorney general.
Charles Wesley Burns, resident bishop San Francisco Area Methodist Episcopal Church and a distinguished alumnus of S. C., congratulated the University of Southern California on behalf of the City of San Francisco and praised the good work that the Trojan school has been doing for the past decade in the legal profession.
Honorary Degrees of Doctor of Law were conferred upon the following: Dean Kirkland, Jesse William Curtis, alumni of S. C. Dr. James Brown Scott was given the Degree of Doctor of Civil Law. The degree of Doctor of Law was also conferred on Mrs. Willebrandt. The assembly was closed with the singing of the alma mater.
CLUB SINGS FORWAMP
Men s Glee Club Fills Three Important Engagements in One Week.
FELLOWSHIPS ARE OFFERED
Student Exchange Offers One Year of German Study to American Students.
ie from the Trojan rooting section, rather from the general admis-seats.
sxt week the Golden Bears will ere for one game, so let’s give the fornians the same sportsmanlike tment that was extended to the dinal varsity during the past ser-It Is the sd rit of the fight and competition that counts in the long and not the heavy end of the e.
Red and Hank’s Super Service Station at 7 in the evening. They will be given written directions. The first group to arrive at the treasure tis declared winner. The bachelors think that they will have a pretty good crowd at tbe treasure by 10 o’clock. Festivities wilj start at this time.
And now they are recognized. Ah! If the bachelors’ aren’t kiddiing us, here is a campus organization worth writing home about.
Appearing as one of the principal features on the Wampas program, the Southern California Glee Club presented a number of selections to the vast audience. Nearly 4000 people were assembled to witness this , latest affair of moviedom and mingled in the audience were many of tbe brightest stars of the silver screen.
According to Horace Judson, manager of the organization, the appearance of the club at this affair marks one of the high points of the 1926 season.
Friday night the Glee Club presented a program at the Biltmore Hotel at the dedication banquet of the Law One year of study in a German uni- | Building. Twenty-five men were used versity, with the privilege of earning | and four tables were reserved for the units good in an American college, is singers. Six numbers in all were sung, offered by the American German Stu- these songs being divided into groups dent Exchange to American students wjth two in each group. The program who are qualified for the work. A lim-1 began at 7 and lasted until 9:30 ited number of students wjth the nec- | o’clock.
essary credentials w'll be granted fel- j Saturday night the annual banquet lowships for the year 1926-27. Appli- ; Df the organization was held at the cations must be made before Febru- Maryland Hotel in Pasadena. Music ary 16.
was furnished by the Maryland concert The exchange is a branch of the In- j orchestra and various forms of enter-stitute of International Education, tainment were used during the affair, which has as its purpose the promo- ; The Glee Club presented a program tion of international good will by a between 9 and 9:45 before one of the mutual study of the institutions and most exclusive audiences it has psychology of different countries ; ever been privileged to entertain, ac-(Contlnued on page four) - c0rding to Judson.
LAW BUILDING DEDICATED BY NOTED GUESTS
Impressive Ceremonies Mark Formal Opening of New Law Building.
Dignified and impressive were the ceremonies of the dedication of the new Law School Building, which took place in the auditorium of the edifice last Friday afternoon. Under the chairmanship of Hon. Albert J. Wallace, president of the University Board of Trustees, the entire program was conducted.
Frank Monroe Porter, Dean of the University Law School, gave an address entitled “The History of the University Law School,” in which he traced the story of its growth from the time when it was a mere group of students interested in the studying of law to the time when this small body was absorbed by what has come to be known as the Southern California I>aw College.
The second address of the dedication ceremonies was given by Hon. John G. Mott, the president of the Los Angeles Bar Association, and was a speech dealing with the “Profession.”
“The Judiciary” was the theme of a speech delivered by Judge Jesse W. Curtis, an associate justice of the Su^ preme Court of California.
The dedicatory address was ably presented by the Hon. James Brown Scott, the secretary of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
The ceremonies of dedication came as an aftermath to the academic pro-(Continued on Page Four)
Acting as a unit the majority of the staff of the Wampus resigned Friday. The action of the executive committee in ignoring the wishes of the staff and selecting an outsider as editor was the reason given by the staff for its action. This follows a fortnight of attacks on the W ampus coming from the country press, faculty committees, and finally the student executives.
Further reasons given for the action were: (1) To allow the new editor to pick his own staff, (2) aid the administration in their published de* mands tor a new staff and (3) as a protest against the removal of Grady Setzler and his associate editors.
When the announcement appeared in the Trojan that the executive committee had gone outside of the publication staff to select an editor, feeling among the staff members ran high. Hurried conferences were held, a written resignation was prepared and the staff members signed without dissent.
“Wre felt that this final slap in the face, coming from the students them' selves, was a little too much to take. Some staff members could not be located. But with three or four exceptions, the staff of the Wampus has resigned,” stated one of the ex-members of the staff.
The resignation of the staff was handed to Chet Mackie, as the new editor, and to Don Cameron, as chairman of the executive committee. This is reported to leave Mackie in a rather difficult situation. The hostility of the faculty, tbe outside criticism and aow the action of the staff resigning have, according to campus rumor, made the
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“JAZZ” PLAY FOR JUNIORS
“Goose Hangs High,” Dealing With Youth, Now Being Released by Mrs. Teschke.
Do the young people of today have any serious thoughts in their heads, or are they concerned only with fhe!r efforts to kill Old Man Time?
John Atwill, manager of ‘ The Goo.-r Hangs High,” seventeenth annual Jun ior play, reports that the answer to this momentous question will be un folded in Bovard Auditorium Friday, the twenty-sixth of this month.
Mrs. Sal’y Teschke, the director, ports that she is highly pleas* d with the histrionic talent shown by the cast. She feels that this is the best cast, part for part, yet assembled on the campus.
In the rehearsals of the first act the work of Eugenia McQuartera, who (Continued on Page Four)
Dormitory Installs Demerit System;
Rules and More Rules
There are rules and rules; but the Dormitory girls have a corner on the market.
The latest invention of said institu tion is the “Merit System,” whose main merit is to guarantee that every girl will be inside the portals by 10:30 | every Friday and Saturday night.
Due to a slight misinterpretation of Robert’s historic rules, under which ! the student council attempted to in-| stall the new rules without constitu i tional authority, there has been a mix i up in the acceptance of the system. However, it seems a certainty that the ; Merit System will soon be one clause ! in the increasingly complicated sys I tem of rule at the W’omen’s Residence Hall.
The main points of the latest “sys tem of torture” include: five demerits for lights on after 11 o’clock, five for staying out ten minutes too late, five for being outside of room in study hours and five for unnecessary noise anytime, anyplace, anywhere. Twenty demerits in one week will concel the young lady’s dates for the following week-end.
One great merit of this system lies in the fact that after the first twenty demerits, one can break as many rules os she wishes without additional pun ishment. It has been suggested thar each girl choose one week in which to get everything out of her system, and then settle down to a dignified, law-abiding life.
The officials hope in installing this system to start a precedent that will be followed by similar rules bein? voted for the sorority houses.